Capacitance detection circuit, capacitance detection method, touch detection apparatus, and terminal device

ABSTRACT

Provided are a capacitance detection circuit. The capacitance detection circuit ( 200 ) is used for detecting capacitances of N capacitors to be detected, the N is greater than or equal to 2, and the capacitance detection circuit ( 200 ) includes: at least N−1 first front end circuits ( 210 ) for converting capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals and performing differencing on the first voltage signals, at least one second front end circuit ( 220 ) for converting capacitance signals of capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals and performing summing on the second voltage signals, and a processing circuit ( 230 ); and the processing circuit ( 230 ) determines a capacitance value of each of the N capacitors to be detected according to a differential signal output by each of the first front end circuits ( 210 ) and a summation signal output by each of the second front end circuits ( 220 ).

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present disclosure is a continuation of international application No. PCT/CN2017/101235, filed on Sep. 11, 2017, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entireties.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present application relates to the field of capacitance detection technologies, and in particular, to a capacitance detection circuit, a capacitance detection method, a touch detection apparatus, and a terminal device.

BACKGROUND

Capacitors are widely applied to numerous electronic terminal devices, such as a touch control sensor for touch control on a display screen of the terminal device. In a process of using a capacitor, it is indispensable to measure and analyze a capacitance value thereof. Nowadays, self-capacitance detection has become a very important measurement and analysis method.

However, since a self-capacitance tends to be relatively great, an existing self-capacitance detection method has lower sensitivity when the self-capacitance is greater; and a volume of a cancel capacitor for improving the sensitivity is larger, so that the cancel capacitor cannot be integrated, and is also excessively high in cost; and further, an increase in self-capacitance causes the sensitivity of the existing self-capacitance detection method to be lower, such that the capacitance value cannot be correctly detected. Therefore, how to improve the sensitivity of self-capacitance detection and accurately detect the capacitance value within a controllable cost range is an urgent problem to be solved.

SUMMARY

Embodiments of the present application provide a capacitance detection circuit, a capacitance detection method, a touch detection apparatus, and a terminal device, which can not only resolve a problem of capacitance detection when a self-capacitance is greater that cannot be resolved by an existing solution, but also improve sensitivity of the capacitance detection.

In a first aspect, an embodiment of the present application provides a capacitance detection circuit for detecting capacitances of N capacitors to be detected, the N being greater than or equal to 2, where the capacitance detection circuit includes: at least N−1 first front end circuits for converting capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals and performing differencing on the first voltage signals, at least one second front end circuit for converting capacitance signals of capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals and performing summing on the second voltage signals, and a processing circuit,

where each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits includes a first input end and a second input end, and each of the at least one second front end circuit includes a third input end and a fourth input end;

a first input end and a second input end of each of at least N−2 first front end circuits are respectively connected to two different capacitors to be detected;

a first input end of a first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits is simultaneously connected to a capacitor to be detected and a third input end or a fourth input end of a second front end circuit, a second input end of the first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits is simultaneously connected to a capacitor to be detected and a first input end of a first front end circuit of the at least N−2 first front end circuits, and the capacitors to be detected to which the two input ends of the first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits are connected are different capacitors to be detected;

a third input end and a fourth input end of each of the at least one second front end circuit are connected to two different capacitors to be detected, respectively;

each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits outputs a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected;

each of the at least one second front end circuit outputs a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected; and

the processing circuit is connected to output ends of each of the first front end circuits and each of the second front end circuits, and is configured to determine, according to the differential signal output by each of the first front end circuits and the summation signal output by each of the second front end circuits, a capacitance value of each of the N capacitors to be detected.

Therefore, in a capacitance detection circuit of an embodiment of the present application, a first front end circuit outputs, to a processing circuit, a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected, which is a differencing process; a second front end circuit outputs, to the processing circuit, a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected, which is a summing process; and the processing circuit determines, according to the received differential signal and the received summation signal, a capacitance value of each of N capacitors to be detected, which is a recovery process. Sensitivity of capacitance detection could be improved by means of differencing, summing followed by recovery without substantively increasing costs.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the first front end circuit includes a first control circuit and a first programmable gain amplifier PGA circuit, where

the first control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the first PGA circuit;

the first control circuit is configured to control the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and control discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

the first PGA circuit is configured to convert, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals, and perform differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the first front end circuit includes a first conversion circuit and a second PGA circuit, where

the first conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the second PGA circuit;

the first conversion circuit is configured to convert capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected into first voltage signals; and

the second PGA circuit is configured to acquire, from the first conversion circuit, the first voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and perform differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the first control circuit includes a first switch group and a second switch group, the first switch group is connected to the DC voltage source and the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the second switch group is connected to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected and the first PGA circuit, where

when the first switch group is in a closed state and the second switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

when the second switch group is in a closed state and the first switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge to the first PGA circuit.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the first conversion circuit includes a first voltage division resistor and a second voltage division resistor, where

the first voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the second PGA circuit, and one of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

the second voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the second PGA circuit, and the other of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the second front end circuit includes a second control circuit and a third PGA circuit, where

the second control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the third PGA circuit;

the second control circuit is configured to control the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and control discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

the third PGA circuit is configured to convert, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals, and perform summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the second front end circuit includes a second conversion circuit and a fourth PGA circuit, where

the second conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the fourth PGA circuit;

the second conversion circuit is configured to convert capacitance values of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected into voltage values; and

the fourth PGA circuit is configured to acquire, from the second conversion circuit, the second voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and perform summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the second control circuit includes a third switch group and a fourth switch group, the third switch group is connected to the DC voltage source and the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the fourth switch group is connected to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected and the third PGA circuit, where

when the third switch group is in a closed state and the fourth switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

when the fourth switch group is in a closed state and the third switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge to the third PGA circuit.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the second conversion circuit includes a third voltage division resistor and a fourth voltage division resistor, where

the third voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the fourth PGA circuit, and one of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

the fourth voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the fourth PGA circuit, and the other of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the first front end circuit includes a first filter circuit and/or a first integration circuit, where

the first filter circuit is configured to filter an interference signal in a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected output by the first front end circuit; and

the first integration circuit is configured to perform integration and amplification processing on the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected output by the first front end circuit.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the second front end circuit includes a second filter circuit and/or a second integration circuit, where

the second filter circuit is configured to filter an interference signal in a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected output by the second front end circuit; and

the second integration circuit is configured to perform integration and amplification processing on the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected output by the second front end circuit.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the first aspect, the first input end is a positive input end, the second input end is a negative input end, and the third input end and the fourth input end are positive input ends.

In a second aspect, an embodiment of the present application provides a capacitance detection method, including the capacitance detection circuit of the first aspect, and the method includes:

converting, by each of at least N−1 first front end circuits, capacitance signals of two connected capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals, and performing differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected;

converting, by each of at least one second front end circuit, capacitance signals of two connected capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals, and performing summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected; and

determining, by a processing circuit according to the differential signal obtained by each of the first front end circuits and the summation signal obtained by each of the second front end circuits, a capacitance value of each of N capacitors to be detected.

Therefore, in a capacitance detection method of an embodiment of the present application, a first front end circuit outputs, to a processing circuit, a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected, which is a differencing process; a second front end circuit outputs, to the processing circuit, a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected, which is a summing process; and the processing circuit determines, according to the received differential signal and the received summation signal, a capacitance value of each of N capacitors to be detected, which is a recovery process. Sensitivity of capacitance detection could be improved by means of differencing, summing followed by recovery without substantively increasing costs.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the second aspect, the first front end circuit includes a first control circuit and a first programmable gain amplifier PGA circuit, and the first control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the first PGA circuit;

the converting, by each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits, the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the first voltage signals, and performing the differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected, includes:

controlling, by the first control circuit, the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, controlling discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

converting, by the first PGA circuit, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals, and performing differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the second aspect, the first control circuit includes a first switch group and a second switch group;

the controlling, by the first control circuit, the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, controlling the discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, includes:

when the first switch group is in a closed state and the second switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

when the second switch group is in a closed state and the first switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge to the first PGA circuit.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the second aspect, the first front end circuit includes a first conversion circuit and a second PGA circuit, and the first conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the second PGA circuit;

the converting, by each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits, the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the first voltage signals, and performing the differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected, includes:

converting, by the first conversion circuit, capacitance signals of two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected into first voltage signals; and

acquiring, by the second PGA circuit from the first conversion circuit, the first voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and performing differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the second aspect, the second front end circuit includes a second control circuit and a third PGA circuit, and the second control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, the third PGA circuit, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected;

the converting, by each of the at least one second front end circuit, the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the second voltage signals, and performing the summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected, includes:

controlling, by the second control circuit, the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, controlling discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

converting, by the third PGA circuit, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals, and performing summing on second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the second aspect, the second control circuit includes a third switch group and a fourth switch group;

the controlling, by the second control circuit, the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, controlling the discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, includes:

when the third switch group is in a closed state and the fourth switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

when the fourth switch group is in a closed state and the third switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge to the third PGA circuit.

Optionally, in an implementation manner of the second aspect, the second front end circuit includes a second conversion circuit and a fourth PGA circuit, and the second conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the fourth PGA circuit;

the converting, by each of the at least one second front end circuit, the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the second voltage signals, and performing the summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected, includes:

converting, by the second conversion circuit, capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected into second voltage signals; and

acquiring, by the fourth PGA circuit from the second conversion circuit, the second voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and performing summing on second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

In a third aspect, an embodiment of the present application provides a touch detection apparatus including: the capacitance detection circuit according to the first aspect or any one of the optionally implementation manners of the first aspect, where the touch detection apparatus determines a touch position of a user according to a capacitance value of each of N capacitors to be detected determined by the capacitance detection circuit.

In a fourth aspect, an embodiment of the present application provides a terminal device, including the touch detection apparatus according to the third aspect.

According to a terminal device in an embodiment of the present application, the terminal device includes a touch detection apparatus, and the touch detection apparatus may determine a touch position of a user according to capacitance values of N capacitors to be detected processed by a capacitance detection circuit by means of differencing, summing followed by recovery. Thus, when the touch detection apparatus accurately determines the touch position of the user on the touch detection apparatus, the terminal device may accurately identify the touch position acquired by the touch detection apparatus, thereby improving touch control sensitivity, and optimizing an existing self-capacitance detection device.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a capacitive touch control system using a capacitance detection circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 2 is a schematic circuit diagram using a capacitance detection circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 3 is a schematic circuit diagram of a first front end circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 4 is a schematic circuit diagram of another first front end circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 5 is a schematic circuit diagram of a second front end circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 6 is a schematic circuit diagram of another second front end circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 7 is a schematic circuit diagram using still another first front end circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 8 is a schematic circuit diagram of yet another first front end circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 9 is a schematic circuit diagram of yet another second front end circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 10 is a schematic circuit diagram of yet another second front end circuit according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 11 is a schematic flowchart of a capacitance detection method according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 12 is a schematic circuit diagram of a touch detection apparatus according to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 13 shows a matrix type self-capacitance sensor applied to an embodiment of the present application.

FIG. 14 shows a triangular self-capacitance sensor applied to an embodiment of the present application.

DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS

The technical solutions in embodiments of the present application will be described hereinafter in conjunction with the attached drawings.

For ease of understanding, a capacitive touch control system using self-capacitance detection in the prior art will be described hereinafter with reference to FIG. 1.

As shown in FIG. 1, a capacitive touch control system includes a Host (Host) 110, a touch integrated circuit (Touch IC) 120, and a touch control sensor 130. The touch control sensor 130 includes a Tx layer and an Rx layer; the Tx layer includes a TX1 channel, a Tx2 channel, a Tx3 channel, a Tx4 channel, and a Tx5 channel; and the Rx layer includes an Rx1 channel, an Rx2 channel, an Rx3 channel, an Rx4 channel, and an Rx5 channel. In the Tx layer, capacitances to ground of the Tx1 channel, the Tx2 channel, the Tx3 channel, the Tx4 channel, and the Tx5 channel are C0, C1, C2, C3, and C4, respectively; and in the Rx layer, capacitances to ground of the Rx1 channel, the Rx2 channel, the Rx3 channel, and the Rx4 and the Rx5 channel are C9, C8, C7, C6, C5, respectively.

Each of the Tx channels in the touch control sensor 130 is respectively connected to the Touch IC 120, and each of the Rx channels is respectively connected to the Touch IC 120. The Touch IC 120 is connected to the Host 110 and can communicate with the Host 110.

It should be understood that, upon self-capacitance detection, a change of a capacitance to ground of each channel (Tx layers and Rx layers) electrode is detected.

Specifically, the touch IC 120 scans the change of the capacitance to ground of each of the Tx channels and the Rx channels in the touch control sensor 130. When a finger is approached, a self-capacitance of a channel near the finger becomes greater, the finger and a Tx channel generate a Cd capacitance, and the finger and an Rx channel generate a Cs capacitance; since a human body is conductive and is connected to ground, a self-capacitance of the Tx2 channel touched and controlled by the finger changes from C1 to C1+Cd, and a self-capacitance of the Rx3 channel changes from C7 to C7+Cs; and therefore, a position touched by the finger can be calculated as long as the Touch IC 120 detects the change of the self-capacitance of the channel.

Since a capacitance value of the self-capacitance is relatively great, and the amount of change caused by the touch control of the finger is relatively small, an existing self-capacitance detection method has a problem of low touch control sensitivity. Increasing the number of cancel capacitors can improve the touch control sensitivity, however, the cancel capacitors cannot be integrated into a chip because of requiring too great cancel capacitance and too many cancel capacitors, and there is a problem of excessively high costs. In some scenarios of greater capacitance to ground, for example, on a touch control display in a Samsung Galaxy Note 7, a user data center (User Data Center, SDC) uses a Y-OCTA technology, and in a touch display screen based on the Y-OCTA technology, a capacitance to ground of each capacitance channel is greatly increased, it is difficult for the Touch IC 120 to detect the change of the self-capacitance of the channel caused by a touch of the finger, and the touch position of the finger cannot be calculated.

Therefore, embodiments of the present application provide a solution and circuit for differencing, summing followed by recovery, which can overcome an influence of a great self-capacitance on self-capacitance detection and improve sensitivity of the self-capacitance detection.

Hereinafter, a capacitance detection circuit according to an embodiment of the present application will be described in detail with reference to FIG. 2 to FIG. 10.

FIG. 2 is a schematic structural diagram of a capacitance detection circuit 200 according to an embodiment of the present application.

As shown in FIG. 2, the capacitance detection circuit 200 is configured to detect capacitances of N capacitors to be detected, the N is greater than or equal to 2, and the capacitance detection circuit 200 includes: at least N−1 first front end circuits 210 for converting capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals and performing differencing on the first voltage signals, at least one second front end circuit 220 for converting capacitance signals of capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals and performing summing on the second voltage signals, and a processing circuit 230.

Optionally, each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits outputs a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected;

each of the at least one second front end circuit outputs a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected; and

the processing circuit is connected to output ends of each of the first front end circuits and each of the second front end circuits, and is configured to determine, according to the differential signal output by each of the first front end circuits and the summation signal output by each of the second front end circuits, a capacitance value of each of the N capacitors to be detected.

Optionally, the processing circuit 230 may be a digital process block (Digital Process Block).

It should be understood that, the processing circuit 230 has operation and storage functions.

Optionally, the processing circuit may have a demodulation function, that is, an ability to demodulate a signal.

It should be understood that, the differential signal output by the first front end circuit and the summation signal output by the second front end circuit that are received by the processing circuit are analog-to-digital converted signals.

For example, analog to digital conversion of the differential signal and the summation signal may be implemented by an analog to digital conversion (Analog to Digital Conversion, ADC) circuit.

Optionally, the processing circuit 230 may also implement a function of calibrating a coordinate of the touch position of the user on the basis of determining a capacitance value of each of the N capacitors to be detected.

Optionally, each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits 210 includes a first input end and a second input end.

Optionally, the first input end is a positive input end, the second input end is a negative input end.

Optionally, in the at least N−1 first front end circuits 210, the capacitors to be detected to which the first input ends of any two of the first front end circuits are connected are different, and the capacitors to be detected to which the second input ends of any two of the first front end circuits are connected are different.

It should be understood that, the capacitor to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected means that the first front end circuit is electrically connected to the capacitor to be detected, and the first front end circuit may acquire a capacitance signal of the connected capacitor to be detected.

Optionally, each of the at least one second front end circuit 220 includes a third input end and a fourth input end.

Optionally, both the third input end and the fourth input end are positive input ends.

It should be understood that, the capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected mean that the second front end circuit is electrically connected to the capacitors to be detected, and the second front end circuit may acquire capacitance signals of the connected capacitors to be detected.

Optionally, a first input end and a second input end of each of at least N−2 first front end circuits are respectively connected to two different capacitors to be detected.

Optionally, a first input end of a first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits is simultaneously connected to a capacitor to be detected and a third input end or a fourth input end of a second front end circuit, a second input end of the first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits is simultaneously connected to a capacitor to be detected and a first input end of a first front end circuit of the at least N−2 first front end circuits, and the capacitors to be detected to which the two input ends of the first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits are connected are different capacitors to be detected.

Optionally, a third input end and a fourth input end of each of the at least one second front end circuit are connected to two different capacitors to be detected, respectively.

It should be understood that, the number of the first front end circuits, the number of the second front end circuits, and the number of the capacitors to be detected in FIG. 2 are merely examples, and the specific numbers are determined according to actual requirements, which are not limited in the embodiment of the present application.

Optionally, each of the N capacitors to be detected is a capacitor formed by an electrode of a touch channel and ground.

For example, as shown in FIG. 2, N=8, the capacitance detection circuit 200 includes: 7 first front end circuits, respectively denoted as 211-217; 1 second front end circuit, denoted as 221; and 8 capacitors to be detected, denoted as a Sensor Channel (Sensor Channel) 0, a Sensor Channel (Sensor Channel) 1, a Sensor Channel (Sensor Channel) 2, a Sensor Channel (Sensor Channel) 3, a Sensor Channel (Sensor Channel) 4, a Sensor Channel (Sensor Channel) 5, a Sensor Channel (Sensor Channel) 6 and a Sensor Channel (Sensor Channel) 7. Capacitance values of the 8 capacitors to be detected are denoted as C0, C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6 and C7.

The first front end circuit 211 is connected to the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1, the first front end circuit 212 is connected to the Sensor Channel 1 and the Sensor Channel 2, the first front end circuit 213 is connected to the Sensor Channel 2 and the Sensor Channel 3, the first front end circuit 214 is connected to the Sensor Channel 3 and the Sensor Channel 4, the first front end circuit 215 is connected to the Sensor Channel 4 and the Sensor Channel 5, the first front end circuit 216 is connected to the Sensor Channel 5 and the Sensor Channel 6, and the first front end circuit 217 is connected to the Sensor Channel 6 and the Sensor Channel 7. The second front end circuit 221 is connected to the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7.

The first front end circuit 211 is configured to output a differential signal a of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1, (V0−V1=a); the first front end circuit 212 is configured to output a differential signal b of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 1 and the Sensor Channel 2, (V1−V2=b); the first front end circuit 213 is configured to output a differential signal c of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 3 and the Sensor Channel 2, (V2−V3=c); the front end circuit 214 is configured to output a differential signal d of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 4 and the Sensor Channel 3, (V3−V4=d); the first front end circuit 215 is configured to output a differential signal e of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 5 and the Sensor Channel 4, (V4−V5=e); the first front end circuit 216 is configured to output a differential signal f of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 6 and the Sensor Channel 5, (V5−V6=f); and the front end circuit 217 is configured to output a differential signal g of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 7 and the Sensor Channel 6 (V6−V7=g). The second front end circuit 221 is configured to output a summation signal h of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7 (V0+V7=h).

The processing circuit 230 is configured to find, according to the differential signals (a, b, c, d, e, f, g) and the summation signal (h) acquired in the foregoing process,

V0, V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, V6 and V7.

V0, V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, V6 and V7 correspond to C0, C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6 and C7. C0, C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6 and C7 can be obtained according to V0, V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, V6 and V7.

Specifically, V0, V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, V6 and V7 can be found according to the following equations: V0−V1=a; V1−V2=b; V2−V3=c; V3−V4=d; V4−V5=e; V5−V6=f; V6−V7=g; and V7+V0=h,

where a, b, c, d, e, f, g can be acquired from the differential signals output by the first front end circuits, h can be acquired from the summation signal output by the second front end circuits, and further, the processing circuit 230 can find V0, V1, V2, V3, V4, V5, V6 and V7 according to the foregoing equations.

Optionally, as shown in FIG. 2, the at least N−2 first front end circuits include first front end circuits 212-217. A first input end and a second input end of each of the first front end circuits 212-217 are respectively connected to two different capacitors to be detected. For example, the first front end circuit 212 is connected to the Sensor Channel 1 and the Sensor Channel 2, respectively; and the first front end circuit 213 is connected to the Sensor Channel 2 and the Sensor Channel 3, respectively.

Optionally, as shown in FIG. 2, a first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits is the first front end circuit 211. A first input end of the first front end circuit 211 is simultaneously connected to a third input end of the second front end circuit 221 and the Sensor Channel 0, and a second input end of the first front end circuit 211 is simultaneously connected to a first input end of the first front end circuit 212 and the Sensor Channel 1.

Optionally, a third input end and a fourth input end of each of the at least one second front end circuit are respectively connected to two different capacitors to be detected. For example, as shown in FIG. 2, the third input end of the second front end circuit 221 is connected to the Sensor Channel 7, and the fourth input end of the second front end circuit 221 is connected to the Sensor Channel 0.

Optionally, each of the N first front end circuits 210 includes a first input end 241, a second input end 242, and a first output end 243; and the first input end 241 of each of the first front end circuits is connected to one of the two connected capacitors to be detected, the second input end 242 is connected to the other of the two connected capacitors to be detected; the first output end 243 is connected to the processing circuit 230, and the first output end 243 is configured to output, to the processing circuit 230, a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the capacitor to be detected to which the first input end 241 is connected and the capacitor to be detected to which the second input end 242 is connected.

For example, as shown in FIG. 2, the first input end 241 of the first front end circuit 211 is connected to the Sensor Channel 0, the first input end 241 of the first front end circuit 212 is connected to the Sensor Channel 1, the first input end 241 of the first front end circuit 213 is connected to the Sensor Channel 2, the first input end 241 of the first front end circuit 214 is connected to the Sensor Channel 3, the first input end 241 of the first front end circuit 215 is connected to the Sensor Channel 4, the first input end 241 of the first front end circuit 216 is connected to the Sensor Channel 5, and the first input end 241 of the first front end circuit 217 is connected to the Sensor Channel 6; and the second input end 242 of the first front end circuit 211 is connected to the Sensor Channel 1, the second input end 242 of the first front end circuit 212 is connected to the Sensor Channel. 2, the second input end 242 of the first front end circuit 213 is connected to the Sensor Channel 3, the second input end 242 of the first front end circuit 214 is connected to the Sensor Channel 4, and the second input end 242 of the first front end circuit 215 is connected to the Sensor Channel 5, the second input end 242 of the first front end circuit 216 is connected to the Sensor Channel 6, and the second input end 242 of the first front end circuit 217 is connected to the Sensor Channel 7.

It should be understood that, the number of capacitors to be detected to which the first input end or the second input end of the first front-end circuit can be connected in FIG. 2 is merely an example, the number thereof is not limited to one, and a differencing operation may also be performed on a plurality of capacitors to be detected, which is not limited in the embodiment of the present application.

Optionally, each of the at least one second front end circuit 220 includes a third input end 251, a fourth input end 252, and a second output end 253; the third input end 251 of each of the second front end circuits is connected to one of the two connected capacitors to be detected, the fourth input end 252 is connected to the other of the two connected capacitors to be detected, and the second output end 253 is connected to the processing circuit 230; and the second output end 253 is configured to output, to the processing circuit 230, a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the capacitor to be detected to which the third input end 251 is connected and the capacitor to be detected to which the fourth input end 252 is connected.

For example, as shown in FIG. 2, the third input end 251 of the second front end circuit 221 is connected to the Sensor Channel 7, and the fourth input end 252 of the second front end circuit 221 is connected to the Sensor Channel 0.

It should be understood that, the forgoing connection refers to being capable of transmitting a signal (such as, a capacitive signal, a voltage signal, a differential signal, a summation signal), and does not necessarily refer to a connection in a physical sense, and the connection described hereinafter is the same.

It should be understood that, the number of capacitors to be detected to which the third input end and the fourth input end of the second front end circuit can be connected in FIG. 2 are merely an example, the number thereof is not limited to one, and a summing operation may also be performed on a plurality of capacitors to be detected, which is not limited in the embodiment of the present application.

Optionally, as an embodiment, the first front end circuit includes a first control circuit and a first programmable gain amplifier (Programmable Gain Amplifier, PGA) circuit, where

the first control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the first PGA circuit;

the first control circuit is configured to control the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and control discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

the first PGA circuit is configured to convert, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals, and perform differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, the DC voltage source may be a 1.2V DC voltage source, a 2.4V DC voltage source, or a 5.0V DC voltage source.

Optionally, each of the first front end circuits may be connected to a DC voltage source, or all of the first front end circuits may be connected to a DC voltage source.

Optionally, the first control circuit includes a first switch group SW1 and a second switch group SW2.

Optionally, the first switch group is connected to the DC voltage source and the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the second switch group is connected to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected and the first PGA circuit.

Optionally, when the first switch group is in a closed state and the second switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

when the second switch group is in a closed state and the first switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge to the first PGA circuit.

For example, as shown in FIG. 3, a first input end 241 of a first front end circuit 211 is connected to a Sensor Channel 0, and a second input end 242 of the first front end circuit 211 is connected to a Sensor Channel 1; and a first control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source Vtx, the Sensor Channel 0, the Sensor Channel 1 and a first PGA circuit.

Firstly, a SW1 in the first control circuit is turned on, a SW2 is turned off, and the DC voltage source is controlled to charge the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1; and after charging the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1 (for example, charged to 20%, or more preferably, fully charged), the SW1 in the first control circuit is turned off, the SW2 is turned on, and discharge of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1 is controlled (for example, fully discharged); when the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1 discharge, the first PGA circuit converts capacitance signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1 into first voltage signals (for example, a capacitance signal C0 of the Sensor Channel 0 is converted into a first voltage signal V0, and a capacitance signal C1 of the Sensor Channel 1 is converted into a first voltage signal V1), performs differencing on the first voltage signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1, to obtain a differential signal (V0−V1) of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1 to which the first front end circuit 211 is connected.

Optionally, a difference value (V0−V1) of the first voltage signals obtained by conversion of the capacitance signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1 is proportional to a difference value (C0−C1) of the capacitance signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1.

It should be understood that, FIG. 3 merely takes the first front end circuit 211 as an example for illustration and description, and other first front end circuits adapted to the embodiment of the present application also satisfy the example described in FIG. 3.

Optionally, under the control of the first switch group and the second switch group, after the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected are subjected to at least one charge and at least one discharge, the first front end circuit outputs the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected.

For example, it may be fully charged each time and fully discharged each time.

For another example, it may be charged to 80% then discharged to 50%, and continue to be charged to 80% then discharged to 50%.

It should be understood that, the number of times of charging and discharging, and the amount of specific charging and discharging are not limited in the embodiment of the present application.

Optionally, as an embodiment, the first front end circuit includes a first conversion circuit and a second PGA circuit, where

the first conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the second PGA circuit;

the first conversion circuit is configured to convert capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected into first voltage signals; and

the second PGA circuit is configured to acquire, from the first conversion circuit, the first voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and perform differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, the first conversion circuit includes a first voltage division resistor and a second voltage division resistor, where

the first voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the second PGA circuit, and one of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

the second voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the second PGA circuit, and the other of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

For example, as shown in FIG. 4, a first front end circuit 211 is connected to a Sensor Channel 0 and a Sensor Channel 1; a first voltage division resistor 31 of a first conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, the Sensor Channel 0 and a second PGA circuit; a second voltage division resistor 32 of the first conversion circuit is connected to the driving voltage source, the Sensor Channel 1 and the second PGA circuit, and the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1 are connected to the second PGA circuit (a positive input end and a negative input end) respectively.

As shown in FIG. 4, in the first conversion circuit, the driving voltage source, the first voltage division resistor 31 and the Sensor Channel 0 constitute a complete circuit. In this circuit, the Sensor Channel 0 serves as an impedance, and the second PGA circuit may obtain a first voltage signal of the Sensor Channel 0 by measuring a voltage at point A;

the driving voltage source, the second voltage division resistor 32 and the Sensor Channel 1 constitute a complete circuit. In this circuit, the Sensor Channel 1 serves as an impedance, and the second PGA circuit may obtain a first voltage signal of the Sensor Channel 1 by measuring a voltage at point B; and

further, the second PGA circuit may perform differencing on the first voltage signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1, to obtain a differential signal (V0−V1) of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 1 to which the first front end circuit 211 is connected.

It should be understood that, FIG. 4 merely takes the first front end circuit 211 as an example for illustration and description, and other first front end circuits adapted to the embodiment of the present application also satisfy the example described in FIG. 4.

Optionally, the second PGA circuit may also achieve filtering by connecting a capacitor Cfb to a resistor Rfb in parallel.

Optionally, the first conversion circuit may further include a first buffer and a second buffer, the driving voltage source is connected to a capacitor to be detected through the first voltage division resistor and the first buffer, and the driving voltage source is connected to the other capacitor to be detected through the second voltage division resistor and the second buffer.

The capacitor to be detected is connected to the second PGA circuit (a positive input end) through the first buffer, and the other capacitor to be detected is connected to the second PGA circuit (a negative input end) through the second buffer.

Optionally, as an embodiment, the second front end circuit includes a second control circuit and a third PGA circuit, where

the second control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the third PGA circuit;

the second control circuit is configured to control the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and control discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

the third PGA circuit is configured to convert, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals, and perform summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, the second control circuit includes a third switch group SW3 and a fourth switch group SW4.

Optionally, the second control circuit includes a third switch group and a fourth switch group, the third switch group is connected to the DC voltage source and the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the fourth switch group is connected to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected and the third PGA circuit.

Optionally, when the third switch group is in a closed state and the fourth switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

when the fourth switch group is in a closed state and the third switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge to the third PGA circuit.

For example, as shown in FIG. 5, a third input end 251 of a second front end circuit 221 is connected to a Sensor Channel 7, and a fourth input end 252 of the second front end circuit 221 is connected to a Sensor Channel 0; and a second control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source Vtx, the Sensor Channel 0, the Sensor Channel 7, and a third PGA circuit.

Firstly, a SW3 in the second control circuit is turned on, a SW4 is turned off, the DC voltage source is controlled to charge the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7; and after charging the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7 (for example, charged to 50%, or more preferably, fully charged), the SW3 in the second control circuit is turned off, the SW4 is turned on, and discharge of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7 is controlled (for example, fully discharged); when the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7 discharge, the third PGA circuit converts capacitance signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7 into second voltage signals (for example, a capacitance signal C0 of the Sensor Channel 0 is converted into a second voltage signal V0, and a capacitance signal C7 of the Sensor Channel 7 is converted into a second voltage signal V7), and performs summing on the second voltage signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7, to obtain a summation signal (V0+V7) of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7 to which the second front end circuit 221 is connected.

Optionally, a sum (V0+V7) of the second voltage signals obtained by conversion of the capacitance signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7 is proportional to a sum (C0+C7) of the capacitance signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7.

It should be understood that, FIG. 5 merely takes the second front end circuit 221 as an example for illustration and description, and other second front end circuits applicable to the embodiment of the present application also satisfy the example described in FIG. 5.

Optionally, under the control of the third switch group and the fourth switch group, after the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected are subjected to at least one charge and at least one discharge, the second front end circuit outputs the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected.

For example, it may be fully charged each time and fully discharged each time.

For another example, it may be charged to 80% then discharged to 50%, and continue to be charged to 80% then discharged to 50%.

It should be understood that, the number of times of charging and discharging, and the amount of specific charging and discharging are not limited in the embodiment of the present application.

Optionally, as an embodiment, the second front end circuit includes a second conversion circuit and a fourth PGA circuit, where

the second conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the fourth PGA circuit;

the second conversion circuit is configured to convert capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected into second voltage signals; and

the fourth PGA circuit is configured to acquire, from the second conversion circuit, the second voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and perform summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, the second conversion circuit includes a third voltage division resistor and a fourth voltage division resistor, where

the third voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the fourth PGA circuit, and one of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

the fourth voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the fourth PGA circuit, and the other of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

For example, as shown in FIG. 6, a second front end circuit 221 is connected to a Sensor Channel 0 and a Sensor Channel 7; a third voltage division resistor 41 of a second conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, the Sensor Channel 7 and a fourth PGA circuit, and a fourth voltage division resistor 42 of the second conversion circuit is connected to the driving voltage source, the Sensor Channel 0 and the fourth PGA circuit; and the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7 are connected to the fourth PGA circuit (one positive input end and the other positive input end) respectively.

As shown in FIG. 6, in the second conversion circuit, the driving voltage source, the third voltage division resistor 41 and the Sensor Channel 7 constitute a complete circuit. In this circuit, the Sensor Channel 7 serves as an impedance, and the fourth PGA circuit may obtain a second voltage signal of the Sensor Channel 7 by measuring a voltage at point C;

the driving voltage source, the fourth voltage division resistor 42 and the Sensor Channel 0 constitute a complete circuit. In this circuit, the Sensor Channel 0 serves as an impedance, and the fourth PGA circuit may obtain a second voltage signal of the Sensor Channel 0 by measuring a voltage at point D; and

further, the fourth PGA circuit may perform summing on the second voltage signals of the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7, to obtain a summation signal (V0+V7) of voltages corresponding to the Sensor Channel 0 and the Sensor Channel 7 to which the second front end circuit 221 is connected.

It should be understood that, FIG. 6 merely takes the second front end circuit 221 as an example for illustration and description, and other second front end circuits applicable to the embodiment of the present application also satisfy the example described in FIG. 6.

Optionally, the fourth PGA circuit may also achieve filtering by connecting a capacitor Cfb to a resistor Rfb in parallel.

Optionally, the second conversion circuit may further include a first buffer and a second buffer, the driving voltage source is connected to a capacitor to be detected through the third voltage division resistor and the third buffer; and the driving voltage source is connected to the other capacitor to be detected through the fourth voltage division resistor and the fourth buffer; and

the capacitor to be detected is connected to the fourth PGA circuit (a positive input end) through the third buffer, and the other capacitor to be detected is connected to the fourth PGA circuit (a positive input end) through the fourth buffer.

Optionally, as an embodiment, the first front end circuit includes a first filter circuit and/or a first integration circuit, where

the first filter circuit is configured to filter an interference signal in a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected output by the first front end circuit; and

the first integration circuit is configured to perform integration and amplification processing on the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected output by the first front end circuit.

Optionally, the first front end circuit may achieve the purpose of converting capacitance signals into first voltage signals and performing differencing on the first voltage signals by using a circuit as shown in FIG. 3, and in this case, a first filter circuit and/or a first integration circuit may be as shown in FIG. 7.

Optionally, the first filter circuit and the first integration circuit may be separately disposed in the first front end circuit, or may be disposed in the first front end circuit in combination. FIG. 7 merely exemplarily describes a solution that the first filter circuit and the first integration circuit are disposed in the first front end circuit in combination.

Optionally, the first front end circuit may achieve the purpose of converting capacitance signals into first voltage signals and performing differencing on the first voltage signals by using a circuit as shown in FIG. 4, and in this case, a first filter circuit and/or a first integration circuit may be as shown in FIG. 8.

Optionally, the first filter circuit and the first integration circuit may be separately disposed in the first front end circuit, or may be disposed in the first front end circuit in combination. FIG. 8 merely exemplarily describes a solution that the first filter circuit and the first integration circuit are disposed in the first front end circuit in combination.

Optionally, the first filter circuit may be a low pass filter.

Optionally, the first filter circuit may be an active analog low pass filter composed of an amplifier, but is not limited thereto.

Optionally, the first integration circuit may amplify a weak capacitance difference signal, to increase a signal noise ratio (Signal Noise Ratio, SNR).

It should be understood that, the first integration circuit shown in FIG. 7 and FIG. 8 may also integrate and amplify other differential signals output by the first front end circuit that can achieve the purpose of converting the capacitance signals into the first voltage signals and performing differencing on the first voltage signals.

It should be understood that, the first filter circuit shown in FIG. 7 and FIG. 8 may also filter other interference signals in the differential signal output by the first front end circuit that can achieve the purpose of converting the capacitance signals into the first voltage signals and performing differencing on the first voltage signals.

Optionally, as an embodiment, the second front end circuit includes a second filter circuit and/or a second integration circuit, where

the second filter circuit is configured to filter an interference signal in a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected output by the second front end circuit; and

the second integration circuit is configured to perform integration and amplification processing on the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected output by the second front end circuit.

Optionally, the second front end circuit may achieve the purpose of converting capacitance signals into second voltage signals and performing summing on the second voltage signals by using a circuit as shown in FIG. 5, and in this case, a second filter circuit and/or a second integration circuit may be as shown in FIG. 9.

Optionally, the second filter circuit and the second integration circuit may be separately disposed in the second front end circuit, or may be disposed in the second front end circuit in combination. FIG. 9 merely exemplarily describes a solution that the second filter circuit and the second integration circuit are disposed in the second front end circuit in combination.

Optionally, the second front end circuit may achieve the purpose of converting capacitance signals into second voltage signals and performing summing on the second voltage signals by using a circuit as shown in FIG. 6, and in this case, a second filter circuit and/or a second integration circuit may be as shown in FIG. 10.

Optionally, the second filter circuit and the second integration circuit may be separately disposed in the second front end circuit, or may be disposed in the second front end circuit in combination. FIG. 10 merely exemplarily describes a solution that the second filter circuit and the second integration circuit are disposed in the second front end circuit in combination.

Optionally, the second filter circuit may be a low pass filter.

Optionally, the second filter circuit may be an active analog low pass filter composed of an amplifier, but is not limited thereto.

Optionally, the second integration circuit may amplify a weak capacitance difference signal, to increase a signal noise ratio (Signal Noise Ratio, SNR).

It should be understood that, the second integration circuit shown in FIG. 9 and FIG. 10 may also integrate and amplify other summation signals output by the second front end circuit that can achieve the purpose of converting the capacitance signals into the second voltage signals and performing summing on the second voltage signals.

It should be understood that, the second filter circuit shown in FIG. 9 and FIG. 10 may also filter other interference signals in the summation signal output by the second front end circuit that can achieve the purpose of converting the capacitance signals into the second voltage signals and performing summing on the second voltage signals.

Optionally, all of the first front end circuits may include merely one integration circuit, to achieve integration and amplification of output signals of the first front end circuit.

Optionally, all of the second front end circuits may include merely one integration circuit, to achieve integration and amplification of output signals of the second front end circuit.

Optionally, all of the first front end circuits may include merely one filter circuit, to achieve filtering of output signals of the first front end circuit.

Optionally, all of the second front end circuits may include merely one filter circuit, to achieve filtering of output signals of the second front end circuit.

Optionally, each of the first front end circuits includes an ADC circuit for analog to digital conversion of an output signal of the first front end circuit.

Optionally, each of the second front end circuits includes an ADC circuit for analog to digital conversion of an output signal of the second front end circuit.

Optionally, all of the first front end circuits and all of the second front end circuits include the same ADC circuit for analog-to-digital conversion of signals output by the first front end circuit and the second front end circuit.

Therefore, in a capacitance detection circuit of an embodiment of the present application, a first front end circuit outputs, to a processing circuit, a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected, which is a differencing process; a second front end circuit outputs, to the processing circuit, a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected, which is a summing process; and the processing circuit determines, according to the received differential signal and the received summation signal, a capacitance value of each of N capacitors to be detected, which is a recovery process. Sensitivity of capacitance detection could be improved by means of differencing, summing followed by recovery without substantively increasing costs.

Further, the first control circuit controls the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and controls discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and thus the first PGA circuit may convert capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected into first voltage signals, and perform differencing on the first voltage signals, which achieves a purpose of converting the capacitance signals into the first voltage signals and performing differencing, and further, the first front end circuit may output a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected.

The second control circuit controls the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and control discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and thus the third PGA circuit may convert capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected into second voltage signals, and perform summing on the second voltage signals, which achieves a purpose of converting the capacitance signals into the second voltage signals and performing summing, and further, the second front end circuit may output a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected.

Further, the first conversion circuit converts capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected into first voltage signal, and thus, the second PGA circuit may perform differencing on the first voltage signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, which achieves a purpose of converting the capacitance signals into the first voltage signals and performing differencing, and further, the first front end circuit may output the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected.

The second conversion circuit converts capacitance signal of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected into second voltage signals, and thus the fourth PGA circuit may perform summing on the second voltage signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, which achieves a purpose of converting the capacitance signals into the second voltage signals and performing summing, and further, the second front end circuit may output the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected.

FIG. 11 is a schematic flowchart of a capacitance detection method 300 according to an embodiment of the present application. The method 300 includes the capacitance detection circuit 200 as shown in FIG. 2, and the method 300 includes:

310, each of at least N−1 first front end circuits converts capacitance signals of two connected capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals, and performs differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected.

Optionally, the first front end circuit includes a first control circuit and a first programmable gain amplifier PGA circuit, and the first control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the first PGA circuit;

that each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits converts the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the first voltage signals, and performs the differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected includes:

the first control circuit controls the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, controls discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

the first PGA circuit converts, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals, and performs differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, the first control circuit includes a first switch group and a second switch group;

that the first control circuit controls the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, controls the discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected includes:

when the first switch group is in a closed state and the second switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and

when the second switch group is in a closed state and the first switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge to the first PGA circuit.

Optionally, the first front end circuit includes a first conversion circuit and a second PGA circuit, and the first conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the second PGA circuit;

that each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits converts the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the first voltage signals, and performs the differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected includes:

the first conversion circuit converts capacitance signals of two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected into first voltage signals; and

the second PGA circuit acquires, from the first conversion circuit, the first voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and performs differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.

320, each of at least one second front end circuit converts capacitance signals of two connected capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals, and performs summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected.

Optionally, the second front end circuit includes a second control circuit and a third PGA circuit, and the second control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, the third PGA circuit, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected;

that each of the at least one second front end circuit converts the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the second voltage signals, and performs the summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected includes:

the second control circuit controls the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, controls discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

the third PGA circuit converts, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals, and performs summing on second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

Optionally, the second control circuit includes a third switch group and a fourth switch group;

that the second control circuit controls the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, controls the discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected includes:

when the third switch group is in a closed state and the fourth switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and

when the fourth switch group is in a closed state and the third switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge to the third PGA circuit.

Optionally, the second front end circuit includes a second conversion circuit and a fourth PGA circuit, and the second conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the fourth PGA circuit;

that each of the at least one second front end circuit converts the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the second voltage signals, and performs the summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected includes:

the second conversion circuit converts capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected into second voltage signals; and

the fourth PGA circuit acquires, from the second conversion circuit, the second voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and performs summing on second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.

330, a processing circuit determines a capacitance value of each of N capacitors to be detected according to the differential signal obtained by each of the first front end circuits and the summation signal obtained by each of the second front end circuits.

Therefore, in a capacitance detection method of an embodiment of the present application, a first front end circuit outputs, to a processing circuit, a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected, which is a differencing process; a second front end circuit outputs, to the processing circuit, a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected, which is a summing process; and the processing circuit determines, according to the received differential signal and the received summation signal, a capacitance value of each of N capacitors to be detected, which is a recovery process. Sensitivity of capacitance detection could be improved by means of differencing, summing followed by recovery without substantively increasing costs.

FIG. 12 is a schematic circuit diagram of a touch detection apparatus 400 according to an embodiment of the present application.

As shown in FIG. 12, the touch detection apparatus 400 includes: the capacitance detection circuit 200 as shown in FIG. 2 to FIG. 10, where

the touch detection apparatus 400 is configured to determine a touch position of a user according to capacitance values of N capacitors to be detected determined by the capacitance detection circuit. In some embodiments, the processing circuit in the capacitance detection circuit has a function of determining a touch position of a user according to capacitance values of the N capacitors to be detected determined by the capacitance detection circuit, or in the capacitance detection circuit, a processing apparatus having the function of determining the touch position of the user according to the capacitance values of the N capacitors to be detected determined by the capacitance detection circuit is implemented by other components/units. In some embodiments, the touch detection apparatus may be integrated into a chip, for example, integrated into a touch control chip, to detect a touch position of a user according to a touch control sensor.

Optionally, each of the N capacitors to be detected is a capacitor formed by an electrode of a touch channel and ground.

Therefore, according to a touch detection apparatus in an embodiment of the present application, the touch detection apparatus may determine a touch position of a user according to capacitance values of N capacitors to be detected processed by a capacitance detection circuit by means of differencing, summing followed by recovery. Thus, the touch position of the user can be accurately determined on the basis of an improvement in detection accuracy of a capacitance value of a capacitor to be detected.

Optionally, shapes of electrodes of N capacitors to be detected in an embodiment of the present application may be a triangle or a matrix type.

For example, as shown in FIG. 13, a matrix type self-capacitance sensor 500 may determine a capacitance value of each of the matrix type self-capacitance sensors by the capacitance detection circuit 200 as shown in FIG. 2 to FIG. 10, and may determine a touch position of a user on the matrix type self-capacitance sensor 500 by the touch detection apparatus 400 as shown in FIG. 12.

It should be understood that, the matrix type self-capacitance sensor 500 is a capacitive touch control screen sensor that merely requires self-capacitance.

For another example, as shown in FIG. 14, a triangular self-capacitance sensor 600 may determine a capacitance value of each of the triangular self-capacitance sensors by the capacitance detection circuit 200 as shown in FIG. 2 to FIG. 10, and may determine a touch position of a user on the triangular self-capacitance sensor 600 by the touch detection apparatus 400 as shown in FIG. 12.

It should be understood that, the triangular self-capacitance sensor 600 is a capacitive touch control screen sensor that merely requires self-capacitance.

Optionally, an embodiment of the present application provides a terminal device, including the touch detection apparatus 400 as shown in FIG. 12.

Therefore, according to a terminal device in an embodiment of the present application, the terminal device includes a touch detection apparatus, and the touch detection apparatus may determine a touch position of a user according to capacitance values of N capacitors to be detected processed by a capacitance detection circuit by means of differencing, summing followed by recovery. Thus, when the touch detection apparatus accurately determines the touch position of the user on the touch detection apparatus, the terminal device may accurately identify the touch position acquired by the touch detection apparatus, thereby improving touch control sensitivity, and optimizing an existing self-capacitance detection device.

Persons of ordinary skill in the art may be aware that various exemplary units and circuits described in conjunction with the embodiments disclosed herein can be implemented by electronic hardware or a combination of computer software and electronic hardware. Whether these functions are implemented in the form of hardware or software depends upon particular application of the technical solutions and constraint conditions of design. Persons skilled in the art may use different methods to implement the described functions for every particular application, but it should not be considered that such implementation goes beyond the scope of the present invention.

It should be understood that, in the several embodiments provided in the present application, the disclosed circuits, branches, and units may be implemented in other manners. For example, the above-described branches are merely exemplary. For example, dividing of the units is merely a type of logical function dividing, and there may be other dividing manners during actual implementation. For example, multiple units or components may be combined or integrated into a branch, or some features may be ignored, or may not be executed.

If being implemented in the form of a software functional unit and sold or used as a separate product, the integrated unit may be stored in a computer-readable storage medium. Based on such understanding, the nature of the technical solutions of the present application, or the part contributing to the prior art, or part of the technical solutions may be implemented in a form of software product. The computer software product is stored in a storage medium and includes several instructions for instructing a computer device (which may be a personal computer, a server, or a network device, and the like) to execute all of or part of the steps of the method described in the embodiments of the present application. The storage medium includes: various media that may store program codes, such as a U-disk, a removable hard disk, a read-only memory (ROM, Read-Only Memory), a random access memory (RAM, Random Access Memory), a magnetic disk, a compact disk, and so on.

The foregoing descriptions are merely specific embodiments of the present application, but the protection scope of the present application is not limited thereto, persons skilled in the art who are familiar with the art could readily think of variations or substitutions within the technical scope disclosed by the present application, and these variations or substitutions shall fall within the protection scope of the present application. Therefore, the protection scope of the present application shall be subject to the protection scope of the claims. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A capacitance detection circuit for detecting capacitances of N capacitors to be detected, the N being greater than or equal to 2, wherein the capacitance detection circuit comprises: at least N−1 first front end circuits for converting capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals and performing differencing on the first voltage signals, at least one second front end circuit for converting capacitance signals of capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals and performing summing on the second voltage signals, and a processing circuit, wherein: each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits comprises a first input end and a second input end, and each of the at least one second front end circuit comprises a third input end and a fourth input end; a first input end and a second input end of each of at least N−2 first front end circuits are respectively connected to two different capacitors to be detected; a first input end of a first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits is simultaneously connected to a capacitor to be detected and a third input end or a fourth input end of a second front end circuit, a second input end of the first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits is simultaneously connected to a capacitor to be detected and a first input end of a first front end circuit of the at least N−2 first front end circuits, and the capacitors to be detected to which the two input ends of the first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits are connected are different capacitors to be detected; a third input end and a fourth input end of each of the at least one second front end circuit are connected to two different capacitors to be detected, respectively; each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits outputs a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected; each of the at least one second front end circuit outputs a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected; and the processing circuit is connected to output ends of each of the first front end circuits and each of the second front end circuits, and is configured to determine, according to the differential signal output by each of the first front end circuits and the summation signal output by each of the second front end circuits, a capacitance value of each of the N capacitors to be detected.
 2. The circuit according to claim 1, wherein the first front end circuit comprises a first control circuit and a first programmable gain amplifier PGA circuit, wherein the first control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the first PGA circuit; the first control circuit is configured to control the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and control discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and the first PGA circuit is configured to convert, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals, and perform differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; or the first front end circuit comprises a first conversion circuit and a second PGA circuit, wherein the first conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the second PGA circuit; the first conversion circuit is configured to convert capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected into first voltage signals; and the second PGA circuit is configured to acquire, from the first conversion circuit, the first voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and perform differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.
 3. The circuit according to claim 2, wherein the first control circuit comprises a first switch group and a second switch group, the first switch group is connected to the DC voltage source and the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the second switch group is connected to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected and the first PGA circuit, wherein when the first switch group is in a closed state and the second switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and when the second switch group is in a closed state and the first switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge to the first PGA circuit.
 4. The circuit according to claim 2, wherein the first conversion circuit comprises a first voltage division resistor and a second voltage division resistor, wherein the first voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the second PGA circuit, and one of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and the second voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the second PGA circuit, and the other of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.
 5. The circuit according to claim 1, wherein the second front end circuit comprises a second control circuit and a third PGA circuit, wherein the second control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the third PGA circuit; the second control circuit is configured to control the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and control discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and the third PGA circuit is configured to convert, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals, and perform summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; or the second front end circuit comprises a second conversion circuit and a fourth PGA circuit, wherein the second conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the fourth PGA circuit; the second conversion circuit is configured to convert capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected into second voltage signals; and the fourth PGA circuit is configured to acquire, from the second conversion circuit, the second voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and perform summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.
 6. The circuit according to claim 5, wherein the second control circuit comprises a third switch group and a fourth switch group, the third switch group is connected to the DC voltage source and the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the fourth switch group is connected to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected and the third PGA circuit, wherein when the third switch group is in a closed state and the fourth switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and when the fourth switch group is in a closed state and the third switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge to the third PGA circuit.
 7. The circuit according to claim 5, wherein the second conversion circuit comprises a third voltage division resistor and a fourth voltage division resistor, wherein the third voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the fourth PGA circuit, and one of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and the fourth voltage division resistor is connected to the driving voltage source, the fourth PGA circuit, and the other of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.
 8. The circuit according to claim 1, wherein the first front end circuit comprises a first filter circuit and/or a first integration circuit, wherein the first filter circuit is configured to filter an interference signal in a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected output by the first front end circuit; and the first integration circuit is configured to perform integration and amplification processing on the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected output by the first front end circuit.
 9. The circuit according to claim 1, wherein the second front end circuit comprises a second filter circuit and/or a second integration circuit, wherein the second filter circuit is configured to filter an interference signal in a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected output by the second front end circuit; and the second integration circuit is configured to perform integration and amplification processing on the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected output by the second front end circuit.
 10. A capacitance detection method, applied to the capacitance detection circuit according to claim 1, the method comprising: converting, by each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits, capacitance signals of two connected capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals, and performing differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected; converting, by each of the at least one second front end circuit, capacitance signals of two connected capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals, and performing summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected; and determining, by the processing circuit according to the differential signal obtained by each of the first front end circuits and the summation signal obtained by each of the second front end circuits, a capacitance value of each of the N capacitors to be detected.
 11. The method according to claim 10, wherein the first front end circuit comprises a first control circuit and a first programmable gain amplifier PGA circuit, and the first control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the first PGA circuit; the converting, by each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits, the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the first voltage signals, and performing the differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected, comprises: controlling, by the first control circuit, the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, controlling discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and converting, by the first PGA circuit, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals, and performing differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.
 12. The method according to claim 11, wherein the first control circuit comprises a first switch group and a second switch group; the controlling, by the first control circuit, the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, controlling the discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, comprises: when the first switch group is in a closed state and the second switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected; and when the second switch group is in a closed state and the first switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected discharge to the first PGA circuit.
 13. The method according to claim 10, wherein the first front end circuit comprises a first conversion circuit and a second PGA circuit, and the first conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and the second PGA circuit; the converting, by each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits, the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the first voltage signals, and performing the differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the differential signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected, comprises: converting, by the first conversion circuit, capacitance signals of two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected into first voltage signals; and acquiring, by the second PGA circuit from the first conversion circuit, the first voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected, and performing differencing on the first voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a differential signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the first front end circuit is connected.
 14. The method according to claim 10, wherein the second front end circuit comprises a second control circuit and a third PGA circuit, and the second control circuit is connected to a DC voltage source, the third PGA circuit, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; the converting, by each of the at least one second front end circuit, the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the second voltage signals, and performing the summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected, comprises: controlling, by the second control circuit, the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, controlling discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and converting, by the third PGA circuit, when the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge, capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals, and performing summing on second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.
 15. The method according to claim 14, wherein the second control circuit comprises a third switch group and a fourth switch group; the controlling, by the second control circuit, the DC voltage source to charge the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and after charging the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, controlling the discharge of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, comprises: when the third switch group is in a closed state and the fourth switch group is in an open state, the DC voltage source charges the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected; and when the fourth switch group is in a closed state and the third switch group is in an open state, the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected discharge to the third PGA circuit.
 16. The method according to claim 10, wherein the second front end circuit comprises a second conversion circuit and a fourth PGA circuit, and the second conversion circuit is connected to a driving voltage source, two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and the fourth PGA circuit; the converting, by each of the at least one second front end circuit, the capacitance signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected into the second voltage signals, and performing the summing on the second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain the summation signal of the voltages corresponding to the two connected capacitors to be detected, comprises: converting, by the second conversion circuit, capacitance signals of the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected into second voltage signals; and acquiring, by the fourth PGA circuit from the second conversion circuit, the second voltage signals corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected, and performing summing on second voltage signals of the two connected capacitors to be detected, to obtain a summation signal of voltages corresponding to the two capacitors to be detected to which the second front end circuit is connected.
 17. A touch detection apparatus comprising a capacitance detection circuit for detecting capacitances of N capacitors to be detected, the N being greater than or equal to 2, wherein: the capacitance detection circuit comprises: at least N−1 first front end circuits for converting capacitance signals of the capacitors to be detected into first voltage signals and performing differencing on the first voltage signals, at least one second front end circuit for converting capacitance signals of capacitors to be detected into second voltage signals and performing summing on the second voltage signals, and a processing circuit, each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits comprises a first input end and a second input end, and each of the at least one second front end circuit comprises a third input end and a fourth input end; a first input end and a second input end of each of at least N−2 first front end circuits are respectively connected to two different capacitors to be detected; a first input end of a first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits is simultaneously connected to a capacitor to be detected and a third input end or a fourth input end of a second front end circuit, a second input end of the first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits is simultaneously connected to a capacitor to be detected and a first input end of a first front end circuit of the at least N−2 first front end circuits, and the capacitors to be detected to which the two input ends of the first front end circuit except the at least N−2 first front end circuits are connected are different capacitors to be detected; a third input end and a fourth input end of each of the at least one second front end circuit are connected to two different capacitors to be detected, respectively; each of the at least N−1 first front end circuits outputs a differential signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected; each of the at least one second front end circuit outputs a summation signal of voltages corresponding to two connected capacitors to be detected; the processing circuit is connected to output ends of each of the first front end circuits and each of the second front end circuits, and is configured to determine, according to the differential signal output by each of the first front end circuits and the summation signal output by each of the second front end circuits, a capacitance value of each of the N capacitors to be detected; and the touch detection apparatus determines a touch position of a user according to a capacitance value of each of N capacitors to be detected determined by the capacitance detection circuit. 